Except for the posting of a smart-phone video of President Obama greeting black bloggers and journalists — a video that found its way to the Drudge Report — the White House does not believe that ground rules for the Monday session were broken, according to the White House liaison for African American media.

Controversy over the meeting, which had gone virtually unreported in the mainstream media, increased late in the week after a Wednesday blog posting about the session by Jeremy W. Peters of the New York Times. It began, "The White House is usually quite good at keeping a muzzle on the media after one of its off-the-record sessions with President Obama and senior members of his administration.

What Obama actually said during his surprise visit to the online "summit" was, "The media is changing so rapidly. It allows us to reach audiences that may not be watching ‘Meet the Press’ — not that there’s anything wrong with ‘Meet the Press.’ I’m just saying that, you know, it might be a different demographic," prompting laughs from the group.

Kevin S. Lewis, director of African American media for the White House, told Journal-isms on Friday that the bloggers did not break the ground rules, save for the posting of the video. Under those rules, as Peters wrote, the first half of the briefings was to be on background, meaning they could report any information they learned but not attribute it to any specific official; the second half was off the record entirely.

"As a black woman and confirmed policy wonk, I can tell you, I don’t look to music and gossip blogs for thought leadership. It’s almost as if the White House decided that any blog or web site that is owned or read by black people would be sufficient."

But Cheryl Contee ("Jill Tubman"), blogging at Jack & Jill Politics, wrote, "Look, if black bloggers and black online media weren’t having a consistent impact in reaching people — if what we are trying to do wasn’t meaningful & important — no one would care what we did, when we did it and whether or not we did it at the White House. Naw mean? You could read this as an attempt to drive a wedge between increasingly effective and powerful black online forces and a new center of power at the White House. We can’t let that happen."

Introducing his observation with, "Oh my people," Ta-Nehisi Coates, blogging for the Atlantic, posted an excerpt from Peters' piece and said, "Insert your favorite line from 'The Poundcake Speech' [by Bill Cosby], 'The Ballot or the Bullet,' Ice Cube or Chris Rock," all of which offer advice on or criticism of some black behavior.

"Can't have an off-the-record convo. Why? Cause bloggers are videoing the president . . ."

Angel Laws, editor of ConcreteLoop.com, another celebrity-gossip site, tweeted of Peters, "i hate the undertone of his article. he is basically saying we can't be trusted." She accused the reporter of not checking his facts and urged others to contact him.

In the comments section under Peters' article, some predictably accused Obama of being "racist" for meeting with black bloggers.

Also in that space, entrepreneurial journalist Mike Green, who is black, said Peters had buried the lead. He said it was this passage:

"The attention the meeting received in the black blogosphere highlighted the vast gap that remained between mainstream media outlets and ones focused at minority groups. Though the meeting occurred on Monday and had been a topic of discussion in black media circles for three days, it received virtually no attention in the mainstream press."

At the White House, Lewis defended the choice of guests, which he said was determined after "a collection of folks got together. We're reaching out to all Americans. People get their information from different places," he said. Lewis added that Peters had not contacted him for his article.

Obama held a session on Friday for members of the Trotter Group of African American columnists. The Journal-isms author, an 18-year member of the group, was disinvited when the White House cut the number of attendees from 18 to 10 and Trotter organizers said attendance would be limited to newspaper columnists and a founder. Thus, there is no firsthand report here.

Luis Urzua, the last of 33 miners to be rescued, left, sings the Chilean national anthem Wednesday with Chilean President Sebastian Pinera. One critic calls the story "really just the flavor of the week."

"Already, there's a book deal about the rescue, a reality show about mining and a Discovery Channel special on the saga. Wednesday's quickie ABC News special on the rescue of the 33 miners, who were trapped underground for 69 days, drew the biggest audience the network has gotten in the time slot in 10 months."

"The choice to shuttle all these resources to Chile does have an impact on what we cover at home. My former Mizzou colleague Lene Johansen posted a heart-wrenching story earlier this week about poverty in Philadelphia in the wake of the Great Recession. Heart-wrenching because of the details, but more so because this kind of thing isn’t on our radar everyday. Poor people don’t buy newspapers. Significant resources go to cover whatever shiny object the American consumption class will chase these days. The Chile miners story, while interesting and heart-warming, is really just the flavor of the week, another form of reality TV in the eyes of the business executives making the call of what resources to spend where."

"The final rescue happened in prime time, ensuring a big audience. Between 8:16 and 9 p.m., when Fox News Channel pre-empted 'The O’Reilly Factor' for special coverage, the channel had a remarkably high audience, nearly 7.1 million in total.

"About 3 million people are usually watching Fox at that hour. Coverage of the final rescue earned Fox its biggest single audience since Election Day 2008."

Journalists of color don't come to mind when members of the public are asked to name the journalist or newsperson they most admire, at least according to the latest poll by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press.

"Among individual journalists, Diane Sawyer is mentioned by 5%, Katie Couric by 4%, Bill O’Reilly by 3% and Glenn Beck by 3%. The differences in the percentages mentioning these news figures are not statistically significant."

"The crash happened around 9 a.m. on Sixth Street and Third Avenue in downtown Fort Lauderdale.

"Police said Silver was attempting to do a U-turn on Sixth Street when an SUV headed east hit the news van's driver's side, flipping it.

" 'It was very, very scary. I didn't see it coming. The truck flipped. I immediately just looked to David and just looked to see if he was OK,' Neki said via phone from the hospital Friday afternoon. 'They had to cut us out through the windshield.'

"When Spanish-language television network Univisión announced last summer that talk queen Cristina Saralegui's program was ending after 20 years, she said it was 'the perfect time to retire the show.' Now she says it was anything but: Univisión unceremoniously pulled the plug," Bridget Carey reported Wednesday in the Miami Herald.

"Often called 'the Spanish Oprah,' the 62-year-old host and journalist told The Miami Herald she was saddened that she couldn't 'retire with respect' after the network told her they didn't want to continue the show.

" 'It was so very unexpected the way it was handled; it was so nasty,' Saralegui said in an interview Wednesday. 'It has to do with creative control with the show.'

"Saralegui, a 12-time Emmy Award winner and executive producer of the show, announced in August that her final episode would be Nov. 1. That final episode has already been taped, but Saralegui says she didn't expect to be wrapping up production for another three years. She was surprised when Univisión officials told her they wanted her to end it and have her host specials.

" 'I said, "Are you firing me?" They said, "No, we just want to put this show to bed," ' Saralegui said.

"Univisión officials, told of her comments, didn't answer them directly."

Aisha Mills and Danielle Moodie became one of the first same-sex couples to apply for a marriage license in the District of Columbia. (Credit: Craig Paulson Photography)

Aisha Mills, a public affairs consultant, and Danielle Moody, an environmental lobbyist, secured their marriage license in the District of Columbia, where same-sex marriage became legal this year. Their story began:

"When Aisha's dear friend Rashad accepted a job in NYC, he invited her and another close friend over to help him pack and reflect on his life in Washington D.C. But when Danielle walked through the door, Aisha put down the cardboard boxes and the packing tape and focused on the vision of love in front of her. It was love at first sight.

"Danielle and I sat in Rashad's window sill and talked about our lives for hours," Aisha remembers.

"Six and a half years later, Aisha and Danielle continue their conversation of love."

"I, for one, think Cepeda can be a game-changer much as Ellen Goodman was when her column first went into national syndication back in the 1970s," James Hill, managing editor of the writers group, wrote on Tuesday.

"Esther is the daughter of immigrants (from Ecuador and Mexico) who took blue-collar jobs to raise their family with the hope for a better life. Her first language was Spanish, yet she self-taught herself English by watching 'Sesame Street' and looking at the many newspapers her parents kept around the house.

"Cepeda is a journalism graduate of Southern Illinois University, and has taken graduate courses at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, where she studied in the Integrated Marketing Communications program. She also spent two years as a public school teacher, and holds a master's degree in education.

"In everything she has done, Esther J. Cepeda exemplifies the American experience. She's got a great story to share with her readers, and I think she'll make quite the contribution — in ways that surprise you — to the great American debate. We're excited. Welcome aboard, Esther."

Voting ends Sunday in "New U," a Ford Foundation-funded program for journalists of color who want to become entrepreneurs. Sixteen participants attended two-day "boot camps" over the summer to learn business skills and how to pitch ideas to mentors and financial experts. Pitches were video recorded, and Unity: Journalists of Color is asking members to vote (http://unityjournalists.org/NewU) for the best business concept. As of 10 a.m. Saturday, according to Doug Mitchell, co-project director, just under 7,500 total votes had been cast. [The figure rose to 9,300 at 5:15 p.m] The Asian American Journalists Association had the highest number of total votes cast per group. The total cast for Native American Journalists Association entries are slightly lower than those entered for the National Association of Black Journalists, though NABJ has the largest membership base. Winning entries among each group each receive $5,000 in seed money for their business.

A poll by the Society for Human Resource Management shows mostly encouraging news about diversity in the workplace despite an economic downturn that forced cuts in many human-resource practices. It showed increases in the percentage of companies that provide training on diversity issues, the number of organizations that have a diverse board of directors and the percentage of organizations that said their diversity practices were very or somewhat effective. "At the same time, the percentage of organizations that have workplace diversity practices — recruiting and retention strategies, and community outreach, among others — declined," the organization said on Thursday, attributing the decrease to budget cuts stemming from the recession.

"CNN's Spanish-language channel CNN en Español, a major television player in Latin America but a laggard in the United States, has announced a programming and marketing makeover aimed at boosting its U.S. audience," Glenn Garvin reported last week for the Miami Herald. "Over the next nine months, CNN en Español will replace almost a third of its programs, remake its on-air look and offer up separate schedules for the United States, Mexico and the rest of Latin America, network executives said at a Miami press conference."

Anqoinette Crosby is joining the Washington Post as its first anchor and on-camera reporter for washingtonpost.com. "She will be leading the launch of Post Now Video Cast that will present latest news and interesting features from the Post multiple times each day. She will also be enhancing our live video coverage and producing original video content for the web," Post editors announced. "Her previous reporting and producing assignments include a 6-year stint as the consumer reporter at PBS' MotorWeek where she created a popular car lifestyles segment called 'Gear.' "

CNN has been holding community screenings of "Almighty Debt — A Black in America Special," which debuts Thursday at 9 p.m. Eastern and Pacific time. "CNN anchor and special correspondent Soledad O'Brien reports for a 90-minute documentary investigation into the creatively proactive ways an African-American faith community in addressing its challenges during the national economic crisis," CNN says. Screenings were to take place in Houston, New York, Washington and Somerset, N.J., co-sponsored by Comcast, Ford, Houston Style magazine and the Washington Informer.

The second most viewed video in the blogosphere from Oct. 4 to Oct. 8, with more than 958,000 views, was a radio clip of (now former) CNN host Rick Sanchez calling Daily Show host Jon Stewart a bigot during an interview on a SiriusXM talk show, according to the New Media Index from the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism. "The interview, which also included comments perceived by some to be anti-Semitic, eventually led to Sanchez's dismissal at CNN," and an apology from Sanchez to Stewart.

Richard Prince's Journal-isms originates from Washington and is published Monday, Wednesday and Friday. It began in print before most of us knew what the Internet was, and it would like to be referred to as a "column." For newcomers: The words in blue (on most computers) are links leading to more information. The Web site BugMeNot.com provides passwords and user names to some registration-only news sites, but use may be illegal in some states. Any views expressed in the column are those of the person or organization quoted and not those of any other entity.

Comments

I was none too pleased with the narrative pushed by the NY Times nor was I pleased with Michele Martin and her minions juvenile elitist behavior on NPR. I thought NPR was better than the Mean Girl's mentality they showed when talking about Black bloggers. Natasha and Angel make more money than NEWSWEEK and The Root combined and probably have larger audiences. Who is Ruben Navarette to judge who is worthy of a meeting with the President? Didn't he get fired because his employer didn't managed to figure out new media while Natasha and Angel Laws have mastered it? Who's the bigger fool? Who's beneath the President? Innovative small business women or a reporter who's floundering in the digital space?. "First they ignore you, then they mock you, then the fight you, and then you win." This reaction from "traditional" journalists means bloggers have already won. Nice to know the White House is finally speaking out I suspect one of the old school journalists in the room fed that story to the Times because that clunkhead reporter could not have come up with that narrative on their own and who else was privy to the emails other than those invited?

I was shocked to learn that the Trotter Group had the audacity not to include Richard Prince in the group that met with President Obama. I am sure he was truly disappointed.

The Trotter Group has a history of lecturing, posturing and offering up judgement commentaries on the shortcomings of Black folks for the Trotter Group to not select Richard to meet with the president is truly unforgiveable and unimaginable..